
Register for a FREE GoComics account and get this plus any other comic strip delivered to your Personalized Comic Page, Daily. With a free account you will be able to build a Comic Page filled with the Comics you want to see each day.
With the largest collection of Comics and Editorial Cartoons online there is plenty to choose from. Upgrade to a GoComics Pro account (Only $.99/Month) and have unlimited archive access to decades of comics.
Customize Homepage
Daily Comics Email
Comment, share, interact with other comic fans
Non Sequitur is Wiley Miller's wry look at the absurdities of everyday life. A hit with fans of all ages, the strip is syndicated in more than 700 newspapers. Non Sequitur has received four National Cartoonists Society divisional awards, the most prestigious in cartooning. It is the only comic strip to win the coveted award in its first year of syndication and the only one to ever win in both the best comic strip and best comic panel categories.
This hilarious creation is not only creative but also clever. It tackles current cultural issues such as politics, celebrities, male-female relations, materialistic desires and society's obsession with weight. Non Sequitur will have you laughing at the controversy of everyday life.
Collectible Prints:
Collectible Prints are always available for all editions. Original art is available on a first-come, first-served basis. Just contact Wiley Miller for either.
Information on Non Sequitur original art: Upon availability, the original art sells for $375 for a daily edition, and $500 for a Sunday edition.
All original art, including most Sunday editions, are in black & white line art (color in newspapers is done in a separate process).
Information on prints:
Prints are available (black and white only) for any edition of Non Sequitur for $75 each.
Most Sunday editions are available in color prints for $150 each.
All prints are on high quality, 11" x 14" cardstock, suitable for framing.
If you would like to have either a print or original personally inscribed, please include a note indicating who it is to inscribed for. Otherwise, the work will NOT be signed.
© Wiley - All Rights Reserved.
Copyright © 2013. Universal Uclick, All rights reserved. Terms & Conditions - Privacy Policy

Comments (91) (Please sign in to comment)
cessna172 said, over 1 year ago
…and the burning bush?
chireef said, over 1 year ago
maybe in effigy
paulproteus48640 said, over 1 year ago
i heard it was a tsunami caused by caldera on the island of santorini
Three Steps Over Japan said, over 1 year ago
It is true that all great stories are based on just a gran of truth. Usually, the weight of the enhancements has succeeded in vaporizing the grain into indiscernible particulate matter. But the original starting point was there, when the screenwriter showed up to kill it off.
Richard S. Russell said, over 1 year ago
This largely explains the entire Bible. Probably the Koran, too.
I don’t think ANYTHING explains the Book of Mormon.
palos said, over 1 year ago
Was this Moses character in a play, movie, adaptation?
Bender_Sastre said, over 1 year ago
@Richard S. Russell
Now, now, Richard, let’s not get into specific religion bashing. If you consider everything that the bible claims to have happened anciently, there’s nothing wholly unheard of that Mormons believe.
I swear Wiley’s done this publicist schtick about Moses before, but in another form. Could have been another biblical figure though; I’ll admit my memory’s a little fuzzy.
jnik23260 said, over 1 year ago
@Bender_Sastre
That was Noah.
kittenpah said, over 1 year ago
The Screen Writer is standing all to fortunately close to Moses’ staff. I foresee some devine retribution.
gmartin997
said, over 1 year ago
@cessna172
A cresote plant. The slightest spark sets it off.
Varnes said, over 1 year ago
I like the kid on top of the cart….
Varnes said, over 1 year ago
Wonder where they got the door?
JohnnyDiego said, over 1 year ago
@Varnes
From Wayne Brady; Door Number Two.
vwdualnomand said, over 1 year ago
moses ran over some mud flats right before the tide came in.
jreckard said, over 1 year ago
@Baslim – the miracle, then, must have been that the “host of Pharoah” drowned in this marsh.